Case
No.: CH/01/6979
Applicant: E.M. and Š.T.
Respondent Party: Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina
Date Delivered: 8 March 2002
DECISION ON ADMISSIBILITY AND MERITS
Factual Background
The
application was brought before the Chamber by E.M. in her own
right and on behalf of her brother, Š.T. In July 1998, under
the influence of alcohol, B.B. shot Š.T. in the head and
killed him. On 21 October 1998, at the conclusion of the
criminal trial for the killing of Š.T., the Municipal Court of
Livno found that B.B. had committed the criminal offence of
murder. However, because of reduced criminal accountability at
the moment of the crime, due to the consumption of alcohol,
the Court found that a sentence of imprisonment or other
punishment was inappropriate. Instead, the Court issued a
procedural decision ordering B.B. to undergo a security
measure of mandatory psychiatric treatment in custody. After
three months the order for psychiatric treatment in custody
was changed to treatment at liberty. B.B. has been free ever
since. The applicant initiated several unsuccessful legal
proceedings requesting a reconsideration of the procedural
decision of the first-instance court. The panel of judges, the
public prosecutor, the defence counsel and the accused at the
trial before the Municipal Court were all citizens of Bosnia
and Herzegovina of Croat origin whereas the victim and his
family were citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina of Bosniak
origin. The applicant E.M., Š.T.'s sister, alleged violations
of her and the decedent's rights.
Admissibility
The respondent Party argued that the application should be
declared inadmissible under the six-month rule (Article
VIII(2)(a) of the Agreement) since more than two years had
elapsed since the time of the decision of the Municipal Court
until the filing of an application. The Chamber found that the
six-month period began to run on 15 January 1999, the date on
which the Cantonal Court refused the applicant's appeal, and
was interrupted less than six months thereafter, on 17 June
1999, with the submissions of the applicant's first letter to
the Chamber, in which she summarised her complaints. A
provisional file was opened at that time. The fact that the
formal application form was filled out and submitted much
later (on 13 March 2001) did not negate the applicant's
compliance with the six-month rule.
Since no other grounds of inadmissibility were raised, the
Chamber declared the application admissible.
Merits
Article 2 of the Convention
The Chamber observed that Article 2 creates a positive
obligation for the state not only to refrain from the
intentional and unlawful taking of life, but also to take
appropriate steps to safeguard the lives of those within its
jurisdiction. Taking into account the passive conduct of the
prosecutor during B.B.'s trial, the Chamber noted that the
criminal proceedings failed to adequately deter B.B. from the
crime, since the perpetrator probably expected no sanction to
follow. The Chamber concluded that this failure to deter was a
breach of the state's obligation to protect life in violation
of Article 2. The Chamber found this breach to be a violation
of both the decedent's and the applicant's rights.
Discrimination
The Chamber found the respondent Party to have discriminated
against the decedent in the enjoyment of his right to life, to
equal treatment before the tribunals and to protection of the
State against violence as protected by Article 5 (a) and (b)
of the CERD. In addition, the respondent Party was found to
have discriminated against the applicant in the enjoyment of
her right as protected by Article 5 (a) of CERD, the
respondent Party thereby being in violation of Article I of
the Human Rights Agreement and E.M.'s rights under Article 2
of the Convention to a proper investigation and fair trial in
regard to her brother's death.
Article 13 of the Convention
The Chamber had decided that the case primarily raised issues
under Article 2 of the Convention. In light of the findings it
had made in respect of that Article, and also in respect to
the findings made in regard to discrimination, the Chamber did
not consider it necessary to examine the applicant's claims
under Article 13.
Remedies
The only remedy requested by the applicant was the retrial of
B.B. In balancing the opposite interests of the applicant (the
conduct of a fair trial) and B.B. (not to be tried again), the
Chamber noted that a retrial of the decedent's murderer could
have been ordered. It however, declined to make the order,
taking into account, inter alia, the length of time that had
elapsed between the applicant's initial letter to the Chamber
on 17 June 1999 and the submission of the formal application
on 13 March 2001.
Decision adopted 8 February 2002
Decision delivered 8 March 2002
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